Peace, Love and Mayhem

Hardcore can be a closed circle, with dogmas attacking from every side, which is why it’s refreshing to see the nonlinear path Trash Talk has taken to its career.

It’s more closely allied with the hip-hop crew Odd Future than with any particular city’s hardcore scene, and on its last two albums — “119” from 2012, and the new “No Peace” (Trash Talk Collective/Odd Future) — Trash Talk has massaged its assault, once relentless, displaying fluency with the usual rules, while slowing its sound down and adding texture and just a trace of finesse. (There are new sounds, too: The kinetic rapper Wiki and the mordant singer King Krule appear on one track of “No Peace.”)

That spirit of inclusion extends to Trash Talk’s live shows, which are muscled and full of mayhem but also almost conspiratorially warm, bringing to mind the old rave credo of P.L.U.R. — peace, love, unity, respect.

Given that this week’s show at Palisades in the Williamsburg-Bushwick nether regions is free with an R.S.V.P., it’s likely to be a huge canvas for Trash Talk to spread its P.L.U.R. hardcore gospel. (5 p.m. Tuesday, 906 Broadway, at Arion Place, Brooklyn; trashtalkhc.com.)